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    <dc:date>2026-03-06T12:27:05Z</dc:date>
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  <item rdf:about="http://hdl.handle.net/11320/10185">
    <title>Measuring Instructor Self-Efﬁcacy when Migrating Face-to-Face Courses Online</title>
    <link>http://hdl.handle.net/11320/10185</link>
    <description>Tytu&amp;#322;: Measuring Instructor Self-Efﬁcacy when Migrating Face-to-Face Courses Online
Autorzy: Yuan, Yanyue; Hargis, Jace
Abstrakt: This study measures instructors’ online teaching self-efﬁcacy with an aim to capture their immediate and initial perception of migrating their teaching online and identify potential instructional needs and support. The authors sent a survey to all instructors in our institution four days prior to the ﬁrst day of classes in spring 2020 and received 73 responses (60% response rate). The number of years of experience with online tools was low (88%). Instructors reported high conﬁdence in their ability to teach online (82%); realization of the effort to create quality online experiences (90%); belief that teaching online would be different (90%); recognition of having to modify their assessment (77%); ability of adjusting teaching efﬁciently with unexpected events (82%); knowledge of where to seek teaching and technology guidance (86% &amp; 89%); and conﬁdence in developing a similar rapport with students (71%). Respondents were split in their beliefs about offering similar active learning opportunities. This study supplements research on instructors’ perception of online teaching as a well-planned and intentional event, offering implications over the immediate and long-term support to be offered to instructors regarding migrating courses online both in times of crisis and when such opportunities arise.
Opis: Acknowledgements: The authors would like to thank all faculty who took their time to respond to the survey</description>
    <dc:date>2020-01-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
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  <item rdf:about="http://hdl.handle.net/11320/10182">
    <title>Sharing Practice in an International Context – a Critique of the Beneﬁts of International Exchanges for Trainee Teachers</title>
    <link>http://hdl.handle.net/11320/10182</link>
    <description>Tytu&amp;#322;: Sharing Practice in an International Context – a Critique of the Beneﬁts of International Exchanges for Trainee Teachers
Autorzy: Whewell, Emma; Cox, Anna; Theinert, Kerstin
Abstrakt: This reﬂective article is based on the experiences of two years of teacher training students from the University of Northampton and the Pedagogical University of Weingarten. This article looks more closely at the beneﬁts that international exchange experiences have afforded the trainee teachers involved and how challenges to the process have been addressed. This reﬂection reveals the value of international exchanges in challenging perceptions and assumptions and how the thinking of the trainee teachers changed following the exchange. This study employs a qualitative approach drawing upon the reﬂections and experiences of the participants through written and spoken data. The ﬁndings reveal trainee teachers developed skills speciﬁc to teaching and in particular teaching languages, and they also demonstrated an increased awareness of non teaching speciﬁc skills such as problem solving and intercultural sensitivity. The reﬂections offer insight into how trainee teachers, use, interpret and subsequently act upon the experiences offered in an international exchange.</description>
    <dc:date>2020-01-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
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  <item rdf:about="http://hdl.handle.net/11320/10181">
    <title>Differing Interpretations of Janusz Korczak’s Legacy in Schools that take Inspiration from His Work: A Study in Four Schools in the UK and Canada</title>
    <link>http://hdl.handle.net/11320/10181</link>
    <description>Tytu&amp;#322;: Differing Interpretations of Janusz Korczak’s Legacy in Schools that take Inspiration from His Work: A Study in Four Schools in the UK and Canada
Autorzy: Underwood, James; Van, Hien Quyen; Zhao, Ying
Abstrakt: The purpose of this paper is to present how a selection of current school leaders in two countries, other than Poland, the country in which he lived, perceive the legacy of Janusz Korczak. These two countries are the United Kingdom and Canada. Its role is to present these interpretations for debate and discussion among other school leaders and practitioners, who claim inspiration from him worldwide. We have not suggested that there is a correct or incorrect way to interpret Korczak, rather we are simply interested in how current practitioners perceive his work. The ﬁrst part of this article is a brief summary of key aspects from the life and works of Janusz Korczak that have entered educational conversation within the United Kingdom and the wider Anglophone world. This has often been through writings by and for teachers or books written for schools, rather than academic texts or even Korczak’s original works. Key aspects of his life story presented here are: those years leading the orphanage ‘Dom Sierot’, and most especially the ﬁnal months of his life in the Warsaw ghetto, and the last recorded events of his life, including his refusal to go to Theresienstadt and his ultimate death in Treblinka. We also present in this section, because of an expectation that schools may have engaged with these, his views on how societal structures being designed by adults disadvantage children; and his valuing of children’s voices, as well as his views on the problematic nature of authority. This paper is a discussion of four linked case studies. Participants for this study were four school leaders, two from the UK and two from Canada. The schools they lead are schools that in public facing aspects of their schools, such as school webpages or public vision statements, refer explicitly to the inﬂuence of Janusz Korczak. The method of data collection used within this study was unstructured interviews with school leaders. Through this process we discovered that there are commonalities in how his legacy has been perceived. These included, for all, intertwining his life and work and in doing so presenting him as a role model to children and teachers. Other aspects of his inﬂuence focused on student voice, the breaking down of hierarchy and the enabling of creativity.</description>
    <dc:date>2020-01-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
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  <item rdf:about="http://hdl.handle.net/11320/10180">
    <title>Parents and Teachers’ Involvement in Designing Educational Programmes within the Albanian Curricula of Pre-university Education: Their Perceptions in this Context</title>
    <link>http://hdl.handle.net/11320/10180</link>
    <description>Tytu&amp;#322;: Parents and Teachers’ Involvement in Designing Educational Programmes within the Albanian Curricula of Pre-university Education: Their Perceptions in this Context
Autorzy: Lumani Zaçellari, Manjola; Miço, Heliona
Abstrakt: The purpose of this study is to analyse the legislative measures and their implementation regarding the participation of children, parents and teachers in creating an educational program in pre-university education system, as a need for better involvement in school of all the actors, as well as the need for the children’s wellbeing. In addition, the study aims to bring parents’ and teachers’ views on the obstacles they face when they try to collaborate and participate in school life and in designing an educational program. Qualitative methods are used to achieve the aim of this study. The data were collected through document analysis (legislation, strategies, and regulations) for analysing how the law addresses participation of children, parents and teachers’ in school and through semi-structured interviews with parents and teachers from two primary schools so that they can state their perceptions on participation in school life. Each of them was posed 12 different interview questions. After evaluating the responses, some important issues were identiﬁed. The participation of children, parents and teachers in Albanian education system has changed in recent years, even promoted as a key that leads to success. However, because of the monist system, where such participation was neither legally recognised nor culturally accepted, this trinomial collaboration has not been easily introduced and integrated in the Albanian educational system. However, parents do not feel very involved in school life, or appreciated when they try to get involved, even though it is legally admitted the need for the collaboration between family and school. They neither take part in the approval of the curricula of the educational institution, nor in the selection of school textbooks as provided by the law. Research has shown that schools as bureaucratic and conservative institutions need to have clear written policies to encourage the participation of the parents and children when drafting an education program. However, when teachers were asked about parents’ participation in school, they said that in many cases parents neglect the collaboration with the school and appear usually when there are problems or troubles, while the participation of children in creating an educational program is still lagging behind.</description>
    <dc:date>2020-01-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
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